4.8 Article

Calcium flickers steer cell migration

Journal

NATURE
Volume 457, Issue 7231, Pages 901-905

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature07577

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Funding

  1. Major State Basic Research Development Program of China [2007CB512100]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30630021, 30800371]
  3. NIH [HL090905]

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Directional movement is a property common to all cell types during development and is critical to tissue remodelling and regeneration after damage(1-3). In migrating cells, calcium has a multifunctional role in directional sensing, cytoskeleton redistribution, traction force generation, and relocation of focal adhesions(1,4) (-7). Here we visualize high- calcium microdomains ('calcium flickers') and their patterned activation in migrating human embryonic lung fibroblasts. Calcium flicker activity is dually coupled to membrane tension ( by means of TRPM7, a stretch-activated Ca2(+)permeant channel of the transient receptor potential superfamily(8)) and chemoattractant signal transduction ( by means of type 2 inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate-receptors). Interestingly, calcium flickers are most active at the leading lamella of migrating cells, displaying a 4: 1 front- to- rear polarization opposite to the global calcium gradient(6). When exposed to a platelet- derived growth factor gradient perpendicular to cell movement, asymmetric calcium flicker activity develops across the lamella and promotes the turning of migrating fibroblasts. These findings show how the exquisite spatiotemporal organization of calcium microdomains can orchestrate complex cellular processes such as cell migration.

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